Introduction to Great India

Great India, a strong and prosperous India, is this groups cherished dream - as is of any true patriot. But moron management of our society by opportunistic political leaderships is leading us to ridiculous imbroglios. Every body, from common-men to our social and political leaders and intelligentsia are crying about our society's overall degeneration. Signals of degeneration are aplenty.

Wide spread corruption Moral decay of the masses, Growing communal schism, Degeneration of National level political parties to insignificance, Proliferation of disintegrative forces of regional/ethnic/caste-based political parties and their gaining decisive prominence, Hung parliaments, Instabilities & inefficiencies of governments, Intermittent elections, and most importantly the Character-crisis in socio-political leadership and Loss of faith in institutions - including the judiciary..... Hypocrisy, sycophancy and cowardice are being identified as our national traits.

All these are symptoms of a decaying society. Concerned with this degeneration, many are trying one way or the other, fighting against one or the other factor mentioned above, to redeem our society from this pathetic degeneration. Mostly, on long term, those efforts have not yet made any dent on the degradation.

Here in this group we would discuss on methods, which we as individuals and as a group can do to bring about measurable/visible changes in the political system that currently promotes corrupt, selfish people as our rulers. We have an action plan, which we can together fine-tine and implement.

You can be the change that you wanted in India; we are about practicable tools and methods to re-establish India as the greatest nation in this world. With support of each other we can do it. Lets begin.............

Mail: sudhakaranck@gmail.com
Phone: +91 9745821113, 0480 2804452, Kerala
Web: http://www.greatindiatrust.org
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Great India..Indian Democracy: Problems and Solutions

Monday, July 5, 2010

Research paper- Internal democracy in political parties a must

The dissolution of political parties: The problem of internal democracy

Yigal Mersel** Researcher, Hauser Global Program, and Emile Noel Fellow at the Jean Monnet Center, New York University. I wish to thank the NYU School of Law and Professor Joseph Weiler, as well as the Fulbright Foundation, for their support of this research project. Email:ym445@nyu.edu


In recent years, various democracies have faced the problem of nondemocratic political parties. In response, some have adopted the practice of the party ban. The main focus in existing jurisprudence has been on the external activities of these parties. In determining whether a political party is nondemocratic, attention has centered on the party's goals and practices. This judicial practice, manifest in different European constitutional courts as well as the European Court of Human Rights, is problematic. It often ignores an essential element in political parties, namely, their internal structures. This paper argues that political parties must be democratic not only externally, in their goals, but also democratic internally, in their organizational practices. The very interdependence between political parties and democracies should promote the parties' adherence not only to democratic goals and activities but also to democratic internal structures. This paper further argues that such internal democracy must be mandatory, and that, in rare cases, there is valid justification for banning political parties that lack internal democracy.

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